New European Internet soccer portal

Published: 23 February 2000 y., Wednesday
The site will initially cater for English, German, French, Spanish and Italian soccer fans. Eurofootball.com will only have an English-language service at first, though the team behind it said German, French, Spanish and Italian language services would be available by May, with other languages added later in the summer. Although eurofootball.com said in a statement it would serve "Europe_s six major footballing nations," its initial service will bypass the Netherlands, winners of the 1988 European championship and co-hosts of Euro 2000 with Belgium. Dan Josefsberg, acting chief executive officer for eurofootball, admitted the Netherlands and Belgium were too important to miss out. Swedish investment fund IT Provider, a privately-held firm based in Stockholm, provided 98 percent of second round funding for eurofootball.com, raising $4 million. Josefsberg added that the biggest investor in IT Provider is Sweden_s Rausing family, which owns food packaging firm Tetra Pak. Josefsberg also said eurofootball.com was currently in talks with several media partners, with a view to bringing them in as shareholders in the firm. He also said the group was close to appointing the London unit of an investment bank to advise on its future financial strategy.
Šaltinis: Excite News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Web sites prey on rivals' stores

A growing number of online companies are ambushing competitors through software that puts ads where marketers want them most--in front of customers visiting rival Web sites. more »

IE 6 to launch on 15 August

Internet Explorer 6 is due to go gold next week and will be released on August 15 as a standalone program, according to software development sites. more »

Microsoft Unveils Content Management Server 2001

Another .NET enabled product has left the stables at Redmond. more »

Ex-hacker knows how worm turns

The worm has kept Josef Chamberlin busy at the keyboard, operating on only snippets of sleep, many recent days and nights. more »

The (Instant) Message is Clear

If you need to reach someone at his or her office, the phone--we now know--is not the best way to do it. E-mail is easier and more popular, as evidenced by the deluge of messages with which cube dwellers are greeted each morning as they log onto their com more »

Europeans warm to buying cars online

Over a third of European Internet users are ready to buy a car on the Internet, according to a new study. more »

Telia will not appeal UMTS license decision

Sweden must maintain the pace of its UMTS network rollout more »

Turning the CodeRedWorm into Profits

While the Federal Bureau of Investigation and network security advocates are busy mobilizing IT managers around the country for the upcoming outbreak of the Code Red Worm, one resourceful Web site operator from the Utrecht in the Netherlands stands to mak more »

'Code Red' worm may re-emerge on Internet Tuesday

The fast-spreading ``Code Red'' Internet worm, which disrupted U.S. government Web sites last week, is likely to start multiplying again on Tuesday and could slow down the Internet, officials said on Monday. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »